The third of Jason Zumpano's collaborations with select visual artists. This time, he teamed with Vancouver's Sydney Hermant (aka Sydney Vermont (Hello Blue Roses/Bonaparte), who provided all the artwork for this release, which includes 2 giclee prints of her unique work. And Jason provided 12 tracks of piano instrumentals, inspired by and accompanying the art. Limited edition of 150, get it while you can!

A very special limited-edition (300) vinyl pressing of one of my favorite albums. Originally released on CD in 2002 by New Hampshire's Two-Ton Santa label, this is its first time ever on vinyl, and marks Catbird's first successful Kickstarter project. Over half of these are already gone via pre-order, so nab one while you can!

The unstoppable Andrew Goldman soldiers on with yet another powerhouse Fulton Lights release. Falling somewhere between an EP and an LP ("Maxi-EP?" "Mini-LP?"), Healing Waters finds Fulton Lights moving ever sonically forward-- this time by incorporating all the varied musical textures that Goldman has mastered in his nearly decade-long career.

This is easily one of the most favoritest albums of the year around Catbird HQ, so when the band suggested that Catbird rerelease it (they sold out their initial pressing of 300 LPs), it was a no-brainer! It's going to become one of your most favoritest too. CD, digital, *and* limited-edition 180g LP.

As if the overwhelming goodness of Hastings Sunrise's 14 songs weren't enough Apollo Ghosts for the world, they also recorded a brand new, 5-song EP for Catbird-- and these songs are every bit as good. You probably need to order both Apollo Ghosts releases, is what you need.

The mighty Moviola's latest (their 7th album in 12 years) is a satisfying, 16-song slab of timeless, cosmic American music. Limited Edition (200) includes a DVD featuring 5 videos, photo slideshow, and unreleased demos. Grab a seat, have a pull from our bottle, and kick back. Feel free to put your feet up on the coffee table. Ties would be loosened if any of us wore ties.

It's the fourth long-player from Chicago's Manishevitz, and the first since 2003's critically-lauded City Life (Jagjaguwar, 2003). On "East to East," Manishevitz cruises through a set of swaggering, thoughtfully-composed rock songs, with a liberal dose of open-ended groove structures (think Neu!) and moody pop mutations (think Roxy Music).

Originally self-released in 2001, Last Night received accolades from the BBC, the Village Voice, Time Out NY, the Washington Post, and more, but due to lack of good distribution channels, the disc always remained extremely hard to find. Catbird is proud to re-release Last Night, complete with a newly-designed letterpressed case. See also: Fulton Lights.